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The Indra and Harry Banga Gallery of CityUHK is excited to announce the exhibition “A Passion for Silk: The Road from China to Europe”, curated by art historian Dr Isabelle Frank. The exhibition presents the 2000-year history of silk, displaying exquisite artefacts from around the globe.
The Indra and Harry Banga Gallery of CityU presents the second phase of the “The Grand Gathering of the Century: Zodiac Heads from the Yuanmingyuan and Important Treasures” exhibition from 5 September to 30 November 2023, displaying a complete set of sculptures of the twelve zodiac heads.
Jointly organised by CityU, China Tourism Group Corporation Limited [China Travel Service (Holdings) Hong Kong Limited], and Poly Art Museum, an exhibition showcasing four original zodiac heads from the Yuanmingyuan of the Qing imperial court will be held from 4 July to 31 October 2023 at CityU.
The Indra and Harry Banga Gallery at CityU presents the new exhibition “Hunters, Warriors, Spirits: Nomadic Art of North China” from 23 July until 23 October.
Researchers at CityU received tremendous accolades at Inventions Geneva Evaluation Days (IGED) 2022 by winning a total of 22 awards, the highest number among local institutions for two years in a row.
The Indra and Harry Banga Gallery at CityU is pleased to present “A Glimpse of Tang Prosperity from Murals – The Exhibition Tour on Murals of the Tang Dynasty” from now until 27 February 2022.
The first large-scale fundraising gala “One Night in Tang Paradise” in support of the Indra and Harry Banga Gallery at CityU was held on 26 November.
Deep learning has resulted in breakthroughs in dealing with big data, speech recognition, computer vision, natural language processing, and many other domains, according to Professor Zhou Dingxuan at the 46th talk in the President’s Lecture Series: Excellence in Academia at CityU on 11 November.
A new exhibition “Atlas of Maritime Buddhism” at the Indra and Harry Banga Gallery of CityU turns the spotlight on how the Maritime Silk Road enabled cultural exchanges through the diffusion of Buddhism.
Improving image quality using the mathematical concepts behind sparsity was the topic in the talk by Professor Raymond Chan Hon-fu of the Department of Mathematics for the President’s Lecture Series on 16 April.